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The land of dying kids 



Farzand Ahmed

Lucknow,  November 10, 2008 

 


Dhannipur at the outskirts of Shivnagari in Varanasi is a name that has become 
synonymous with painful death of children due to malnutrition.
It's also a name that presents a pathetic picture of a stone-hearted 
administration. This became more than clear when frail and dangerously 
underweight Ishrat breathed his last on Saturday.
Ishrat was the twelfth child to die of acute malnutrition in recent months. 
The two-year-old Ishrat suffering from grade-4 protein-energy malnutrition had 
weighed hardly 3.2 kg when he died. 
'By administration's own admission there were 106 children suffering from 
severe malnutrition in Dhannipur alone. This is happening because auxiliary 
health staff assigned to look after the children do not visit the area. 30 
quintals of grains meant for distribution among the poor weavers of the village 
was lying undistributed till Ishrat breathed his last', said Dr Lenin 
Raghuvanshi of People's Vigilance Committee for Human Rights (PVCHR).  
Just before that two-year-old Shaheena Parveen weighing just three kg had 
gasped to death. A few days before Shaheena collapsed, her neighbour, 
two-year-old Sahabuddin, weighing hardly two kg died.
And there were others in the same age and weight-group, who were waiting for 
painful death. Yet the administration was 'doing it best' to save the children 
from the cruel jaws of death.
Local people say that there was reason for such neglect: they are children of 
weavers whose looms once used to churn out sparkling silk saris. 
Today their parents are hardly able to arrange food or medicine because they 
were unable to be engaged in other manual works.
While visiting the village PVCHR, Dr Lenin Raghuvanshi felt 'shocked and 
ashamed'. He and his team was told that the local administration instead of 
helping the villagers handed them cards meant for 'above poverty line' people 
that denies them ration from public distribution system (PDS) 
Recently the most damning comment came from Bijo Francis of Hong Kong-based 
Asian Human Rights Commission. He had said Sahabuddin died as he was suffering 
from grade lll malnutrition (categorized as 'Severe'), a condition that the 
world hears of in places like Somalia.
Yet, he said, Uttar Pradesh is not Somalia (where there is non-functioning 
govt). 'It has a democratically elected government. It has ministers and 
secretaries who travel around the state in the name of governance in expensive 
air-conditioned vehicles.
It has a woman chief minister at its helm, who has vowed to eradicate 
discrimination and poverty in the state. 
Barely six months before Ishrat died, the Uttar Pradesh government had brought 
out a first-ever report entitled "State of Children in Uttar Pradesh" and it 
made a sensational reading.
The report a joint effort of state's Planning Department and UNICEF disclosed 
while Uttar Pradesh is home of 52 per cent of the severely malnourished 
children the all-India figure was 43.
It also revealed that while the percentage of malnutrition among children was 
just 35 per cent in the least developing world, the figure for Sub-Saharan 
Africa was meagre 28 per cent. South Asia as whole has 42 per cent compared to 
26 per cent in the developing countries. 
According to the report the government realised that malnutrition significantly 
impacts living condition of children. Ironically, malnutrition is associated 
with half of all child deaths and Uttar Pradesh accounts for over 10 million of 
India's 72 million malnourished children.
Majority of the districts, across central, eastern, western and Bundelkhand 
regions report high prevalence of malnutrition. Besides, the state also has 
high infant and maternal mortality rate -73 per 1000. 
Of the 2.5 million children who die in the country every year, close to 4 lakhs 
die in Uttar Pradesh and every third infant born in the state is under weight - 
below 1200 grams. 
But what the 'The State of Children in UP' talks about was shocking to the 
world as it revealed that majority of state's children lived in the wild world.
According to this report Uttar Pradesh accounted for 23 per cent of kidnapping 
of children at the national level. Incidents of other heinous crimes like 
murder, rape and infanticide were also found to be equally high in the state, 
particularly in Western Uttar Pradesh. 
Uttar Pradesh reported the highest number of murders of children accounting for 
39.2 per cent of the total cases reported in the country. A total of 3,542 
cases of child rape were reported in the country during 2004 and the state has 
ranked third amongst other states in this crime. 
A recent report published by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) showed 
that between 2003-2004 there was an alarming 24 per cent rise in the crime 
against children in the country. While the number of such cases was 11,633 in 
2003, it rose to 14,423 in 2004.
Among the states Madhya Pradesh ranked first with 3,653 cases while UP ranked 
third with 1,921 cases. 
However it showed a decline by 10.2 per cent as compared to 2,248 cases during 
2004. Uttar Pradesh, according to this report, stood first with 735 reported 
cases of kidnapping. 
But the most heinous was the rape of children and Uttar Pradesh reported 394 
cases in 2003 accounting 11.12 per cent of the total child rape reported in the 
country. 
Uttar Pradesh ranked third among states for child rape cases in 2004-just 
behind Madhya Pradesh (710 cases) and Maharashtra (634 cases). 
Like other crimes, incidence of rape was also high in Western Uttar Pradesh. Of 
the 11 districts that showed high incidence 7 were located in Western Uttar 
Pradesh.







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Dr. Lenin (Ashoka Fellow and 2007 Gwanju Human Rights Awardee)
 Mobile:+91-9935599333
 Please visit:
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 www.pvchr.org
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www.dalitwomen.blogspot.com
www.lenin-shruti.blogspot.com
http://www.orkut.com/Community.aspx?cmm=51624734

My final words of advice to you are educate, agitate and organize; have faith 
in yourself. With justice on our side I do not see how we can loose our 
battle.. The battle to me is a matter of joy. The battle is in the fullest 
sense spiritual. There is nothing material or social in it. For ours is a 
battle not for wealth or for power. It is battle for freedom. It is the battle 
of reclamation of human personality…. 
Dr. B.R.Ambedkar



      
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